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N/A N=99 Randomized Prevention

Alcohol Intervention for First Year College Students

Underage Alcohol Use

Enrolled (actual)
99
Serious AEs
0.0%
Results posted
Jan 2024
Primary outcome: Primary: Acceptability-Number of Participants Who Found the Study Overall Favorable — 38; 0 Participants

Study Design & Population

Study type
Interventional
Phase
N/A
Interventions
Text Messaging Intervention (Behavioral)
Age
Adult · 18+ yrs
Sex
All
Sponsor
University of North Texas Health Science Center
Primary completion
Aug 2023

Outcome Measures

OutcomeResultp-value
PRIMARY
Acceptability-Number of Participants Who Found the Study Overall Favorable
38; 0
PRIMARY
Acceptability-proportion of Participants Who Would Recommend the Study
36; 0
PRIMARY
Acceptability and Feasibility-ratings of Text Message Content Areas
3.27; 3.00; 2.72; 2.88; 2.48
SECONDARY
6 Week Alcohol Initiation (Number of Participants Who Initiated Drinking)
6; 3
SECONDARY
3 Month Alcohol Initiation (Number of Participants Who Initiated Drinking)
4; 3
SECONDARY
6 Month Alcohol Initiation (Number of Participants Who Initiated Alcohol Use)
4; 7
SECONDARY
9 Month Alcohol Initiation (Number of Participants Who Initiated Alcohol Use)
6; 4
SECONDARY
6 Week Alcohol Quantity (Number of Drinks Per Week)
1.89; 2.03
SECONDARY
3 Month Alcohol Quantity (Number of Drinks)
1.52; 2.03
SECONDARY
6 Month Alcohol Quantity (Number of Drinks Consumed Per Week)
1.48; 1.67
SECONDARY
9 Month Alcohol Quantity (Number of Drinks Consumed Per Week)
1.46; 1.21

Summary

While a large focus of research on U.S. college drinking has focused on the prevalence of and problems related to heavy-episodic drinking, less has focused on college students who are either abstainers or lighter drinkers (i.e., for men, drinking 4 or fewer drinks in two hours and 14 or fewer drinks per week; and for women drinking 3 or fewer in two hours and 7 or fewer drinks per week). Over 40% percent of college students ages 18-22 do not report drinking in the past month with only half of those engaging in regular heavy-episodic drinking. Research suggests that a significant proportion of students who were abstinent or light drinkers prior to and upon entering college initiate drinking and progress to becoming heavy-episodic drinkers. This provides evidence that the first few months of college is a high-risk time for initiating both drinking and heavy-episodic drinking and that delaying the onset of heavy-episodic drinking among light drinkers and abstainers should lead to reduced harms throughout the college years and young adulthood. Mobile phone-based interventions are an innovative method for reaching young people and have been established as an empirical approach towards addressing health issues, including alcohol use. The ultimate goal of this proposal is to develop, refine and pilot a text message (TM) intervention for abstainer and lighter drinking first year college students with the ultimate goal of delaying alcohol initiation and/or reducing alcohol use escalation. An iterative process of focus groups, intervention content development, and user feedback focused on the unique experiences of abstainers and lighter drinkers will inform the TM Intervention to be delivered in a pilot study with 6 weeks of TMs. The pilot study will include a 6 week post-intervention assessment, and 3, 6, and 9 month follow-ups among 100 incoming first year abstainer and lighter drinker college students. Given that reducing young adults' and college students' engagement in excessive alcohol use has been listed as a major objective of Healthy People 2020 and a key priority of NIAAA, an intervention that focuses on delaying alcohol initiation and escalation into higher-risk alcohol use among abstainer and lighter drinkers could make important strides to achieving this goal.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

Eligibility criteria includes:

  • age 18-19 (see Identity and Age Verification below; If a participant screens in at 18 and turns 20 prior to the focus group, the participant will be allowed to be in the research study.)
  • birth date that is consistent with their given age
  • first-year college student at the University of North Texas
  • valid email address
  • have a text messaging plan on their mobile phone
  • drinking 14/7 or fewer drinks per week for men/women
  • no episodes in the past month of consuming 5/4 drinks in two hours for men/women
  • express any willingness to take a sip of alcohol
  • if female, must not be pregnant or trying to get pregnant
  • willing to participate in focus groups at the University of North Texas

Exclusion Criteria

  • Not meeting inclusion criteria
  • unwillingness to participate
  • failure to provide consent (e.g., declining participation in the study)
  • providing inconsistent responses (e.g., age) identified by the survey
  • having already participated in the study as identified by overlap or consistency in computer IP addresses, contact information, and demographics
View full record on ClinicalTrials.gov →

Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03750838). Outcome figures and adverse-event rates are extracted automatically from the registry's posted results and are provided for clinician reference, not as a substitute for the primary publication.

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